logo
Chimwemwe Undi, Shani Mootoo, Bren Simmers among poets longlisted for League of Canadian Poets prizes

Chimwemwe Undi, Shani Mootoo, Bren Simmers among poets longlisted for League of Canadian Poets prizes

CBC30-04-2025

Chimwemwe Undi, Shani Mootoo and Bren Simmers are among the Canadian poets longlisted for the League of Canadian Poets' poetry awards for books published in 2024.
The organization administers three poetry prizes to celebrate the past year's best published works — the Gerald Lampert Memorial Award for debut books, Pat Lowther Memorial Award for books by Canadian women and Raymond Souster Award for books by League members. The winner of each prize receives $2,000.
Undi's Scientific Marvel is nominated for both the Gerald Lampert Memorial Award and the Raymond Souster Award.
Scientific Marvel is a poetry collection that looks into the history of and current life in Winnipeg. With humour and surprise, it delves into deeper themes of racism, queerness and colonialism while keeping personal lived experiences close to the page.
Scientific Marvel won the 2024 Governor General's Literary Award for poetry.
Chimwemwe Undi is a Winnipeg-based poet, editor and lawyer. She was the Winnipeg poet laureate for 2023 and 2024. She won the 2022 John Hirsch Emerging Writer Award from the Manitoba Book Awards and her work can be found in Brick, Border Crossings, Canadian Literature and BBC World. Undi was longlisted for the 2020 CBC Poetry Prize.
If you're interested in poetry, the 2025 CBC Poetry Prize is currently accepting submissions. You can submit an original, unpublished poem or collection of poems from April 1-June 1.
Shani Mootoo and Bren Simmers are both longlisted for the Pat Lowther Memorial Award.
Mootoo is being recognized for the poetry collection Oh Witness Dey!
With no record of how they got there and where they're originally from, Shani Mootoo's great-great-grandparents were brought to Trinidad by the British. Oh Witness Dey! discusses the concept of "origin" through an exploration of history, displacements and legacy, starting with her own.
Shani Mootoo on chocolate, house chores and cryptic notes
Mootoo is a writer and visual artist who currently lives in Ontario. Her debut novel was 1997's Cereus Blooms at Night. Her novel Polar Vortex was shortlisted for the 2020 Scotiabank Giller Prize. Her other books include the novels Cane | Fire, Moving Forward Sideways like a Crab and Valmiki's Daughter. In 2022, she won the Writers' Trust Engel Findley Award for fiction writers in the middle of their career.
Bren Simmers is nominated for her poetry collection The Work.
The poems in The Work explore the themes of loss and grief and how one can make themselves whole again after being broken. From the sudden death of her father, her mother's dementia and her sister-in-law's terminal illness, Simmers' poems show us how healing can come from love.
The Work was among the finalists for the 2024 Governor General's Literary Award for poetry.
P.E.I. writer Bren Simmers wins 2022 CBC Poetry Prize for work inspired by how Alzheimer's affects language
Bren Simmers is the author of four books, including the wilderness memoir Pivot Point and Hastings-Sunrise, which was a finalist for the Vancouver Book Award as well as a collection of poetry titled If, When. Simmers won the 2022 CBC Poetry Prize for her poetry collection Spell World Backwards, which is included in The Work. She was previously longlisted for the CBC Poetry Prize in 2013 and in 2012 for Science Lessons.
Shō Yamagushiku and Zehra Naqvi are both nominated for the Gerald Lampert Memorial Award and the Raymond Souster Award.
Yamagushiku is nominated for shima, a poetry collection that questions both the past and future of a community exiled, anchored in the relationship of a father and son. It shows the fragility of memory with a voice at once yearning and precise.
Yamagushiku is a writer and researcher living in Victoria. In 2022, Yamagushiku was selected as a mentee by Kaie Kellough through the Writers' Trust of Canada's mentorship program. shima is his debut poetry collection.
Naqvi is being recognized for The Knot of My Tongue, which uses a variety of poetic forms to capture a cast of characters as they attempt to express the inexpressible, from a new immigrant to Canada trying to speak a new language to the myth of Philomena searching for ways to communicate after her husband cuts off her tongue.
Naqvi is a Vancouver-based writer who was born in Karachi. She won the 2021 RBC Bronwen Wallace Award for Emerging Writers. The Knot of My Tongue is her debut poetry collection.
Barbara Tran is the only poet to receive 3 nominations for her collection Precedented Parroting, which explores themes of loss, the natural world, Asian stereotypes and our feathered friends. It's also a book about survival through generations and how both loss and feathers can enable and necessitate flight.
Tran is a poet whose work has appeared in Women's Review of Books, Ploughshares and The New Yorker. Her honours include a MacDowell Colony Gerald Freund Fellowship, Pushcart Prize and Lannan Foundation Writing Residency. She was born in New York City and currently lives in Toronto. Precedented Parroting was a finalist for the 2024 Governor General's Literary Award for Poetry.
In 2018, Tran was on the longlist for the CBC Nonfiction Prize.
2025 Gerald Lampert Memorial Award longlist:
2025 Pat Lowther Memorial Award longlist:
The Seventh Town of Ghosts by Faith Arkorful
Heliotropia by Manahil Bandukwala
I Will Get Up Of Of by Simina Banu
impact statement by Jody Chan
Farm: Lot 23 by Tonya Lailey
Empires of the Everyday by Anna Lee-Popham
Good Want by Domenica Martinello
Oh Witness Dey! by Shani Mootoo
The Knot of My Tongue by Zehra Naqvi
The Work by Bren Simmers
Invisible Lives by Cristalle Smith
Precedented Parroting by Barbara Tran
2025 Raymond Souster Award longlist:
The shortlisted titles for each award will be announced on May 7, 2025.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

B.C. Lions: Aiming high with Canadian supply in the season opener
B.C. Lions: Aiming high with Canadian supply in the season opener

Vancouver Sun

time7 hours ago

  • Vancouver Sun

B.C. Lions: Aiming high with Canadian supply in the season opener

Justin McInnis knows who will have the biggest pre-game impact Saturday at B.C. Place . After all, the B.C. Lions' standout wide receiver understands that you can't beat legendary American rapper Snoop Dogg to get more than 50,000 fans jacked for the club's CFL opener against the Edmonton Elks. 'I'm excited,' McInnis said Thursday following practice. 'I grew up listening to Snoop. But honestly, I'm one of the weirder guys on the team. I don't wear headphones on game day or anything like that. I just like to soak up the crowd and be in the pre-game environment. 'Hear everything and it should be fun for our fans. It's Snoop Dog. Everyone is excited to see him.' Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. McInnis will do his part to entertain when the ball is snapped. And that could also be quite the show after a career season in 2024. McInnis led all receivers last campaign in league yardage with 1,469, and was the first Canadian since Andy Fantuz in 2010 to lead that category. He was also second with 92 receptions and third in touchdown grabs with seven. H is yards total was second highest by a Canadian member of the Lions after Matt Clark (1,530 yards), and the eighth-best for a Canadian all-time. Check out our Top 10 CFL players heading into the 2025 season! 🇨🇦🏈 Do you agree with our list? 🤔 FULL TOP 50 LIST | The 28-year-old Pierrefonds, Que., native is an imposing target for quarterback Nathan Rourke with a 6-foot-5, 210-pound frame and plenty of zip and zag to leave defensive backs in his wake, or use his vertical skills to out-contest any defender. He did that in practice Wednesday and it bodes well as a weapon. 'The best part of my game is I've got to use my height,' said McInnis. 'I'm not the fastest in the league, and I'm not able to do a lot of things that smaller guys can do. I'm always going to continuously work on getting better body control and things that will be a big advantage.' Add a full-season pull with Rourke, who spent the last two seasons with four NFL teams before returning to the Lions last August, and the dynamic duo could develop the kind of chemistry to intimidate and dominate. 'Even in the off-season, we threw quite a bit, and at training camp,' said McInnis. 'One thing I like about Nate is that he's always communicating about things he sees and likes, and how he wants us to run certain routes. At the end of the day, it's being on the same page and he does a great job of expressing that. 'What's so good about him is if we see things a certain way as receivers, we'll all give input and get to common ground on that. That's what has been super refreshing, to have that chemistry where we can talk instead of what's just drawn up. 'We can put our own little tweaks on it and make it better.' The best combos get to a place where the quarterback will instinctively know when a receiver might switch up a route that is not working because of coverage and break in a certain direction. That's another asset. 'We talk about that suff all the time, and even certain looks,' added McInnis. 'To this day, we're not perfect.' If practise makes perfect, then Rourke has taken it to another level. He didn't let snow get in the way in February of getting off-season reps with McInnis. He shovelled an area at the Lions' practice facility to get in another day of work. 'I don't think I shovelled that much, but we were out there,' laughed McInnis. 'We had a little square on the field and we were able to get some throwing in. We made a square track and got our work in for the day. 'Nate is one of the hardest-working guys I've ever been around. He's in here every day, and in the off-season he's throwing four or five times a week. I've never seen anyone as locked in and as dedicated as he is. Not just the game and the team, but himself.' Run all this by Rourke and you get the feeling that mutual admiration is the real deal and not just words. After all, any quarterback loves the option of throwing balls to a certain height and knowing his guy is probably going to win that battle. 'You put (McInnis) in the right spot and there's not too many people who can go up and get it,' said Rourke. 'He has a wide catch radius and you don't have to be perfect with him. Just put it in the general area and he's going to come down with it most of the time. 'For his size, he surprises people with how polished he is. And blows by people more often than not. His speed is something that people take for granted.' McInnis is buoyed by potential of the Lions improving on an uneven 9-9-0 record last season and then suffering a stinging West Division semi-final loss on home turf. The vibe seems different. 'There's a different feeling in the air with intensity and physicality,' he stressed. 'I think that's something we're going to be able to show Saturday.' It will also be the first opening week since 1968 featuring two Canadian starting quarterbacks — Rourke and the Eskimos' Tre Ford — and the first time it has occurred in the same game. The impact of McInnis is reflected in being named among top-10 players expected to excel in 2025. He is listed sixth overall by TSN and first among receivers. If that isn't enough incentive to help get the Lions get back to the Grey Cup for the first time in 14 years, he knows proving his worth will help move the win meter. Will one of these teams snap their Grey Cup appearance droughts? 🫣🫣 Must-see games at a B.C. Place this season: Who: Saturday, June 21 vs. Winnipeg Blue Bombers, 4 p.m. Why: Running back Brady Oliveira won most outstanding player and top Canadian honours last season with 1,353 yards on 239 carries. The Winnipeg native also rushed for three TDs. Who: Saturday, July 19 vs. Saskatchewan Roughriders , 4 p.m. Why: Transplanted prairie fans always add to buzz. Lions eager to avenge 28-19 semifinal playoff loss to the Riders last November. The Lions outscored the Riders 35-20 on July 13 at home. Who: Friday, Sept. 26 vs. Toronto Argonauts, 7 p.m. Why: Who are these guys? The Argos stunned the heavily favoured Bombers 41-24 in the Grey Cup last November at B.C. Place. EXTRA POINTS — F ans are encouraged to be in their seats at 5:45 p.m. in advance of Snoop Dogg's performance. The pre-game Backyard Party is back at Terry Fox Plaza starting at 2 p.m. A portion of Robson Street will be blocked off to allow more fans to celebrate another season. bkuzma@

B.C. Lions: Justin McInnis is quite the catch for the season opener
B.C. Lions: Justin McInnis is quite the catch for the season opener

Calgary Herald

time9 hours ago

  • Calgary Herald

B.C. Lions: Justin McInnis is quite the catch for the season opener

Article content Justin McInnis knows who will have the biggest pre-game impact Saturday at B.C. Place. Article content After all, the B.C. Lions' standout wide receiver understands that you can't beat legendary American rapper Snoop Dogg to get more than 50,000 fans jacked for the club's CFL opener against the Edmonton Elks. Article content Article content 'I'm excited,' McInnis said Thursday following practice. 'I grew up listening to Snoop. But honestly, I'm one of the weirder guys on the team. I don't wear headphones on game day or anything like that. I just like to soak up the crowd and be in the pre-game environment. Article content Article content McInnis will do his part to entertain when the ball is snapped. And that could also be quite the show after a career season in 2024. Article content McInnis led all receivers last campaign in league yardage with 1,469, and was the first Canadian since Andy Fantuz in 2010 to lead that category. He was also second with 92 receptions and third in touchdown grabs with seven. His yards total was second highest by a Canadian member of the Lions after Matt Clark (1,530 yards), and the eighth-best for a Canadian all-time. Article content Check out our Top 10 CFL players heading into the 2025 season! 🇨🇦🏈 Do you agree with our list? 🤔 FULL TOP 50 LIST | — TSN (@TSN_Sports) June 4, 2025 Article content Article content The 28-year-old Pierrefonds, Que., native is an imposing target for quarterback Nathan Rourke with a 6-foot-5, 210-pound frame and plenty of zip and zag to leave defensive backs in his wake, or use his vertical skills to out-contest any defender. He did that in practice Wednesday and it bodes well as a weapon. Article content Article content 'The best part of my game is I've got to use my height,' said McInnis. 'I'm not the fastest in the league, and I'm not able to do a lot of things that smaller guys can do. I'm always going to continuously work on getting better body control and things that will be a big advantage.' Article content Add a full-season pull with Rourke, who spent the last two seasons with four NFL teams before returning to the Lions last August, and the dynamic duo could develop the kind of chemistry to intimidate and dominate. Article content 'Even in the off-season, we threw quite a bit, and at training camp,' said McInnis. 'One thing I like about Nate is that he's always communicating about things he sees and likes, and how he wants us to run certain routes. At the end of the day, it's being on the same page and he does a great job of expressing that.

B.C. Lions: Justin McInnis is quite the catch for the season opener
B.C. Lions: Justin McInnis is quite the catch for the season opener

Ottawa Citizen

time9 hours ago

  • Ottawa Citizen

B.C. Lions: Justin McInnis is quite the catch for the season opener

Article content Justin McInnis knows who will have the biggest pre-game impact Saturday at B.C. Place. Article content After all, the B.C. Lions' standout wide receiver understands that you can't beat legendary American rapper Snoop Dogg to get more than 50,000 fans jacked for the club's CFL opener against the Edmonton Elks. Article content Article content 'I'm excited,' McInnis said Thursday following practice. 'I grew up listening to Snoop. But honestly, I'm one of the weirder guys on the team. I don't wear headphones on game day or anything like that. I just like to soak up the crowd and be in the pre-game environment. Article content Article content McInnis will do his part to entertain when the ball is snapped. And that could also be quite the show after a career season in 2024. Article content McInnis led all receivers last campaign in league yardage with 1,469, and was the first Canadian since Andy Fantuz in 2010 to lead that category. He was also second with 92 receptions and third in touchdown grabs with seven. His yards total was second highest by a Canadian member of the Lions after Matt Clark (1,530 yards), and the eighth-best for a Canadian all-time. Article content Check out our Top 10 CFL players heading into the 2025 season! 🇨🇦🏈 Do you agree with our list? 🤔 FULL TOP 50 LIST | — TSN (@TSN_Sports) June 4, 2025 Article content Article content The 28-year-old Pierrefonds, Que., native is an imposing target for quarterback Nathan Rourke with a 6-foot-5, 210-pound frame and plenty of zip and zag to leave defensive backs in his wake, or use his vertical skills to out-contest any defender. He did that in practice Wednesday and it bodes well as a weapon. Article content Article content 'The best part of my game is I've got to use my height,' said McInnis. 'I'm not the fastest in the league, and I'm not able to do a lot of things that smaller guys can do. I'm always going to continuously work on getting better body control and things that will be a big advantage.' Article content Add a full-season pull with Rourke, who spent the last two seasons with four NFL teams before returning to the Lions last August, and the dynamic duo could develop the kind of chemistry to intimidate and dominate. Article content 'Even in the off-season, we threw quite a bit, and at training camp,' said McInnis. 'One thing I like about Nate is that he's always communicating about things he sees and likes, and how he wants us to run certain routes. At the end of the day, it's being on the same page and he does a great job of expressing that.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store